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I was responding to your statement that we can't say Rome gave us the Bible because the OT existed before Jesus "Rome", and that we need to convert to Judaism. I was just highlighting that Jesus was Jewish, and so were Peter and all of the Apostles who were also the very first Christians. Christianity is Judaism fulfilled so you have it exactly backwards above.
It's certainly not backward.
If the Pharisees were the "Authoritative church" as you claim, you still have a problem. You are rejecting the authoritative church with the claim of having a new authoritative church.
You have two competing authoritative churches that disagree with each other. Under the rules you've created, you must decide how both can be authoritative (probably infallible) and yet have a very different understanding.
Because while we may agree that Jesus is the promise God made to mankind, Judaism most certainly does not agree with that and as the authority, they are either correct or not.
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Here is another example of your changing words to rephrase what I actually said shifting the meaning and setting up your straw-man to beat down. Congratulations. Authoritative =/= Infallible.
With regard to Jesus and the Pharisees remember what he said about them they sit on Moses' Seat therefore do and observe whatever they tell you, but do not do what they do because they are hypocrites. Jesus recognized that at that moment they were the proper authority with the power to bind and loose because they sat on the seat of Moses. Infallible? No. Authoritative? Yes.
No, I am using the words that have been used in this very thread. I asked asked previously if I agreed with the "fallible collection of infallible books"
But it is good that we agree that just because someone claims authority doesn't mean they have that authority, nor that they are infallible.
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I would like to point out that that NONE of these words you have posted in your "response" to the question originally asking Where did we get the Bible from have attempted to address the actual question. NOT ONE. 100% of everything you have posted here is just telling us what we cannot claim and/or what the end result or consequence of our position must mean (which you are very wrong about btw).
Because the intent of my initial response was to challenge (correctly) the premises of the original question. That
FTACo88-FDT24dad did not want or like the challenge is not my issue.
But where did we get the Bible from? I'll quote my favorite theologian, Johann Gerhard:
"Although God did not directly write the Scriptures, but used prophets and apostles as his pen and instrument, yet the Scripture is not, aon that account, of any the less authority. For it is God, and indeed God alone, who inspired the prophets and apostles, not only as they spoke, but also as they wrote; and he made use of their liips, their tongues, their hands, their pen. Therefore, or in this respect, the Scriptures also, as they are, were written by God himself For the prophets and apostles were merely instruments."
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And now to address this point First Century Christians like Mary, Peter, the Apostles, Paul, etc. etc. etc. were ALL Jews who became followers of Jesus. The fact that other Jews did not convert to become followers of Jesus but remained Jews changes nothing about the NT Church. The fact that Jews kept being Jews does nothing to change what Christians believe or what the Christian Church believes or teaches. Jesus built his Church on Peter and the Apostles and gave them His authority and the guidance and protection of the Holy Spirit and promised that guidance until the end of the ages. That's good enough for me.
And? Did the followers of Jesus remain Jews and follow the customs of the jews? No, they followed Jesus and turned against the ways of the Pharisees...the group with claimed authority.
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We are still on the question of Where did we get the Bible from? right? Because thus far you have offered nothing in the way of an answer to that question. Nada.
answered, and your response is completely irrelevant as you continue try and only answer the questions you want to ask yourself.
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You continue to say that no Church or human "commissioned" the writings that became the NT as if proactively commissioning the writings is somehow necessary. I don't understand the point you are attempting to make or what you think that proves? Jesus Christ chose his Apostles and Disciples and He established his visible and authoritative Church on earth. These leaders, through the course of establishing churches and spreading the good news and teaching the faith did many things. One of those many things was to write letters to instruct, teach, encourage, correct, and reproof. They were not hyper-focused on the documentation part, but some of these many letters were preserved by the Church and were eventually recognized as Scripture. Was that their intent? Probably not, but the Church gathered and collected writings and discerned which of them should be included or excluded from the Bible.
Yes it matters. Redstone is currently attempting to claim the Scriptures are a product of Rome. It absolutely matters that no authoritative group played any specific role in the creation of the Bible.
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I have looked into who removed the books from the Bible, and the answer should be very concerning for any "Sola Scriptura" Protestant believer. Unfortunately, it seems most would rather just keep their heads buried in the sand about it and not look into it critically for themselves. When America was born the Bible contained 73 books. In the early 1800's, Protestant Bible societies began a movement to finally have the 7 Deuterocanonical books expunged from the Bible and eventually they were successful. Alarmingly it is not possible to pinpoint WHO was actually responsible and by WHAT authority they made this decision or from WHERE this "authority" derived.
Good! You looked! So we can agree that Luther did not remove those books. Glad we can finally put that to rest and not make that silly accusation anymore.
Just so we are clear, you claim this is "very concerning for any 'Sola Scriptura' Protestant." Why? History is on Protestants side.
What you alone established is that the Reformers did not remove the books, and they upheld the historical view of those books, that they were included in the Bible, but given their apocryphal status, would not be used in doctrinal matters.
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I know you keep saying this but it really answers nothing. I can accept the books are/were disputed which begs the question WHO ended the dispute? By what authority? Saying they were disputed does not give permission to jettison the books and cast them out.
The actual dispute over the apocryphal books has never been resolved. It's well established that the view of Rome is not equal to that of even the EO. Rome did their best to try and settle it at Trent, but that's about it. That they were disputed is not for an authority to say, but instead one of historical fact. That they are not primary in doctrinal matters.
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The entire disagreement we are having is about what books belong in the Bible. Your response is vague and ambiguous and thus unintelligible. When you say Church what do you mean and when?
No, as with everything, it's not about what belongs in the bible, but about Rome's claim to authority. For all the claims of what the Reformation did, the damage done by the claims of Rome and the Pope so far exceed anything else that it's not close. The amount of false doctrine and death that sit at the hands of the Pope might make Satan blush.
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The rest is just ramblings.
Without your appeal to Scripture, you have nothing to claim.
But as Redstone wants to claim, Scripture only exists because of "the Church" which is also Rome for yall.
It's circular and the proof is in the schisms at the feet of Rome. Starting with the great schism, then burning of heretics and then the Reformation that finally recovered the Scriptures from the hands of a fallible man and church.